“Basically, unless something drastic happens, it’ll be there for a while longer,” said Dean Bennett, Hampden’s community and economic development director. “No current plans are ongoing [that] I’m aware of to remove it, probably because the expense is a significant one.”

The 48-year-old boat does look different, however. While the town of Hampden, the Maine Department of Environmental Protection and the U.S. Coast Guard all have declined to move the boat, some employees of a nearby private business removed the boat’s mast and other equipment.

“We started dismantling it,” said Tim Rogers, manager of The Waterfront Marine store off Main Road in Hampden. “We took the mast off along with some other odds and ends that were safety concerns.”

While The Roamer is not a safety concern as long as it remains in its current location and state, it could become one.

“It’s potentially a hindrance for the marina,” Bennett said. “If it breaks up or shifts position with the ice accumulating and shifting on the river, it could be a problem for Waterfront Marine, especially if we have boats moored out there.”

“As it sits right now, it seems no one has jurisdiction over it,” Bennett said. “The DEP has no jurisdiction because there is no threat of any pollution, and the Coast Guard has none because the vessel is no hindrance to navigation of that waterway.

“According to my conversations with the DEP, there are minimal amounts of fuel in the boat, so it definitely doesn’t rise to the level of being any kind of concern for the DEP.”

That doesn’t help the folks at Waterfront Marine.

“If it stays right where it is, it won’t be a problem, but it is kind of an eyesore, and it’s a distraction as everyone wants to come and take a look and take pictures,” said Rogers. “And the problem there is sometimes we get people wandering onto our property near the shoreline and you can slip and fall on the bank, especially little kids with all those loose rocks and loose, wet footing.”